John Lunn
John Lunn is a Scottish composer, known for the music from the series Downton Abbey and for many other television and movie soundtracks.
Early life and education
Lunn was born in May 1956. His father was a saxophonist in a jazz band.Lunn graduated from Glasgow University, where he studied 12-tone techniques. He has cited among his musical influences John Cage, Milton Babbitt, and György Ligeti, as well as Miles Davis. Lunn was also a member of "systems music" band Man Jumping, an early 1980s "jazz-pop-worldbeat fusion ensemble", where he played bass and keyboard.".
He took a short course in computer music at MIT, and assembled his own computerised compositional system, using Cubase software. He later acquired a Prism Sound ADA-8XR multichannel converter and an Orpheus FireWire interface, accompanying them with external hardware analogue dynamics and EQ units in the form of a Maselec MLA-2 tri-band compressor and a Maselec MEA-2 equaliser.
Career
Television
He began composing for BBC Scotland in the late 1980s, with Beatrix: The Early Life of Beatrix Potter and The Gift. His work also includes music for the television series Hamish Macbeth, Lorna Doone, North Square, Madame Bovary, Cambridge Spies, Bleak House, Hotel Babylon, Little Dorrit, Downton Abbey, Waking the Dead, The White Queen, Shetland, Grantchester, The Last Kingdom, and Belgravia.Opera
Lunn has written several operas. Two of them, Misper and Zoë , were written for Glyndebourne. Another, Mathematics of a Kiss, was written for the English National Opera. He wrote the 2006 operetta Tangier Tattoo, with librettist Stephen Plaice, again for Glyndebourne.Lunn's violin concerto was premiered by Clio Gould and the London Sinfonietta at the Queen Elizabeth Hall.
Albums published
Awards
His music for Sky TV's Going Postal was winner of Best TV Score in the 2010 RTS Awards and was nominated for a BAFTA and an Ivor Novello award. The BBC adaptation of Dickens' Little Dorrit was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Outstanding Original Score.